Alcoholic Drinks Raise the Intake of Breast Cancer Canada Drugs

Females who have as little as three alcoholic drinks per week may
have a fairly boosted threat of emergent breast cancer. Thus, increasing their consumption of Canadian prescription drugs .
...

Females who have as little as three alcoholic drinks per week may
have a fairly boosted threat of emergent breast cancer. Thus, increasing their consumption of Canadian prescription drugs .

"We did see a modest risk of breast cancer associated with
lower levels of alcohol consumption," said lead study author Dr. Wendy
Chen, an assistant professor of medicine at Brigham and Women's Hospital and
Harvard Medical School in Boston.

"It really is a cumulative average over a long period of time
that gave the most consistent association with breast cancer risk," Chen
said.

Dr. Steven Narod, research chair in breast cancer at Women's
College Research Institute in Toronto, said the study was "well conducted."

"For breast cancer, it does seem the risks [of alcohol] start
up at a lower level than we previously thought," Narod said.

But he advised females who drink habitually not to fret too much.
"I don't think I would worry about drinking one or two drinks a week. If
your average is five or six a week, I'm not sure that I would be particularly
worried about that, either. But 10 or more a week, maybe," Narod said. Also, since most drinkers are also smokers,
this is something to consider – there may be a need to buy Alimta .

"Previous studies have suggested a glass of red wine daily
has cardiovascular benefits, and those findings should not be discounted,"
said Narod.

"Women who abstain from all alcohol may find that a potential
benefit of lower breast cancer risk is more than offset by the relinquished
benefit of reduced cardiovascular mortality associated with an occasional glass
of red wine," he wrote.

Furthermore, the study authors stated no evidence exists to expose
that giving up drinking will decrease a
female's threat of breast cancer, and lessen their visit to Canadian pharmacy drugstores .